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Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1865-06-17

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V- vhB-:'!'A4 :r-'; ill .-ll urn? ' Volume JUNE 1865. NUMBER - . "" ----- 'iirMraM UtiA V- -a- w. 7-30 230,000,000. ' By authority of the Secretary of the Treasury, the undersigned, the Genera! Subscription Agent for tin iu .of United State Securities, offer to th pnblio f aa thtr3 eerie of Treasury Note, being seven and -jtaree-tenth per cent, interest per annum, known m 7-30 ; r.Tnese note are isned under date of Jnly 15, 1805, mad art payable three years from that date in cer-Ireney, or are eoarertibio at the option of the holder Into . ' N - . fj. S. 5-SO Six per eeni. : bop-BSAZima sozxss, The Bond are now worth a handicme premium, and are exempt, a are all the Goremment Bonds, from State, County, and Municipal taxation, tckic add from mm to tkrme per cent, per annum to their balm, aeeordiag to the rate leried upon other property. The interest is payable Mmi-annually by coupon attached to eaoh note, which may be cut off and (fold, to any feanlt or banker. The interest at Y.30 percent, aatoants to AaeceBt per day on $50 note. Two cento $IOO $300 Ten . . 81 " ITote of all the . t 1000 $5000 denominations ' named will be promptly furnished upon receipt of subscriptions- The notes of this Third Series are precisely similar in form and privileges to the Seren-Tbirties already sold, exeept that the Government reserves to itself the option of paying interest in gold coin at 6 per cent instead of 7 3-10tna in currency. Subscribers Will deduct the interest in currency up to July 15th. at the t 'm i when they subscribe. Tha delivery of the note of this third series of the Seven-thirties will commence on the 1st of June, and will be made promptly and eoatinuously ' after tha1 date; v x . , .'-.-,;:::: . . , The slight change made la the condition of this TH1BD SERIES affects only the matter of interest-Tha payment in gold, if made, will be equivalent to the currency interest of the higher rate. 'The return to specie payments, in the event of which only will the option to pay interest in Gold be availed of, would so reduce and equalise prices that purchases made with six per cent, in gold woald bo fully equal to those made with seven and three-tenth per eeat. in currency. This is i . THE ONLY LOAH IS 2IABZET JTow offered by the Government, and its superior ad-r Village make it tha . " ,v. ' f ' Great Popular Loan of the People. "i Less tHaa $230,000,000 of the Loan authorised by Congress axe Mow. on the market. . This amount, at the late aAwMen-U ie Mag abeorbewlll all be sub-criWd for- within -sixty days,'&an the notes will undoubtedly command a premiam, as has uniform! teen the case on closing the subscription to ouer Xoans. - - . ... ' " " ' " . la order that eitisens of every town and ler'.ion of the country may be afforded facilities for trying the . Lean, the National Banks, State Baab., vnd Private Bankers throughout the country have generally agreobt to receive subscription at rar. Subscribers will select their own agents, in whom they have con-' fldenoe, and who only an- to be responsible tot the delivery of the note f',r which they receivn orders; ' JAT C00KB, . - - Subecription Agent, Pkita : JST; Subscriptions received by the Firtt National 'Srnnt of lfomnt Vernon, and Knox County Motional Bank of Momnt Vernon. :. June 3 :Certincate of Authority Knox County National BanR of . llonnt. Vernon. TRBASURYDEPARTMENT, Omr"CoPTaoLLi:B of the Ccrrbnct . . : Wi-aaixoTOir, April 25th, 1865. TTTHEREAS. bv satis factorv evidenc nmunU . f f to the narferstgaed, it has been made to appear tkat "The Kaox County National Bank of Mount ; Veraon," ia the City of Mount Vernon, in the county ' of Knox, and State ef Ohio, has been duly organised ander and aeeordiag to the requirements of the Act ef Congress, aatitled Aa Act to provide a National Currency, secafwi by a pledge of United States Bonds, and to provide for the circulation and redemption thereof," approved Jane 3d, and has complied with all the previsions of said Act required to be eompiieo. witt before commencing the business of Baakiac.aAaersaid ast; v . . - . If ow, therefore, I, Freeman Clarke.Comptroller of aha Carreue do hereby certify that " The Knox O0aaty National Bank of Mount Vernon," in- the City af Mount Vernoa, in the County ef Knox, and tha State ef Ohio, is authorized to eommeaoe the business .of Banking ander the Aet aforesaid. In tastlmonv whereof, vitnui mv lknl . MJtAJ land seal of office, tkia t.n.lHk Am-m .r af a f m m m m . -Apnifieaa. - i , FREEMAN CLARKE, -May 13-604. Comptroller of the Currency CLOSING UP BUSINESS ... . V .. . . - . ' -in onms orm : IllTviftT County National Bank of Mount r Vernons T Y -A ' BXSOLUTIOJr adopted at a stockholder V meeting of thi-3ank, on the 13th last. a- mroved kvth HrA tirr.ntotr! nn ffca'Ifttli ( , Ika been datomined to close up tha business of the -Knox County Bank. Z?7- ttorJ,wby given .that on aad after ,the lstday of Jane (Prox.) this Bank wUl ebaie la - lVX.?pti- th,eoUctinre-St-?, iMivablaaad ether due, aad payment of iU debt. VPh f?! At 0OBt U balanees on . t i& aiUx iSa date above mentioned will be tran. ; jaredtb '.,. , , '.' w ' tS lIaox Conaty Uatiowd Bank t ziounv Ternoni wnien as niuir tn tv. tr : ' ':-7 .B"Wrt,W tt Banking room, v i i taWgd itcexJttjc'oajaion to the pablteZ . :".Cii9- l-cuUtion or other lUbiliUeeef the KEet Cocr r r nx,wta be paid on praseatatioa at the i Connt-r efts lijo f wy a auooal Bank. May 21--3w.. . .. . - - .' -. .- IT ' m i.. . A 7 l.LiiC W TpRCSxa thnt hi friends wUl sot fajite finlhxm r iL : K H1l lat.a.iT . .tv. a m a : . , lest .'r:.,. VAlao rood aL -jTCI j - , I i. taiTd and forala by f17 ," " - ruBiirIit. LOAN -. . , -'Cab .hnMT..w.tH. Line on Che CelebrtUlon of eaee. IT TBOMA aOOD. - And- is it thus ye welcome Peace, From mouths of forty-pounding Bores ? O, eease exploding Cannons ! eeaae. Least Peaee affrighted, than oar shore 1 Not ao the quiet Queen should come ; But like a Nurse to still ear Fears, With shoes of List, demurely dumb, And Wool and Cotton in our Ears 1 " She asks for ao triumphal Arch ; No Steeples for their noisy Tongues; Down Drumsticks, down ! She needs no March, . Or blasted Trump! from brasen Lungs. She wants no Noise of mobbing Throat . To tell that She is drawing nigh ; Why this Parade of scarlet Coats, When War ha elosed his bloodshot eye ? Returning to Domestic Loves, When War ha ceased, witW all it Hi, Captains should come like sackiag Doves, With Olive Branches in tfeeir Sills. No need there is of vulgar Shout, Bells, Cannons, Trumpet, Fife and Drum, To let us know that Peace is come; And Soldiers marching all about. Lo ! where the Soldier walk, alas ! With Scars received on Foreign Grounds ; Shall we consume in colored Glac The Oil that should be pour'd in wounds t The bleeding Gap of War to close. Will whining Rockets' Flight avail? Will Squibs enliven Orphans' Woes? - Or Crackers cheer tha Widow's Tale? Punch, in its issue ftr March a, tha happily hits the people who run wild over the negroes, regardless of the wants of poor people at home: Ain't I black enough to be cared for ? I'm not a black nigger, 'tis true. As armies and fleets are prepared fur. And misaionaries i sent te. But I'm black as dirt can well make me, And if, by the look of my skin, You'd sigh for a blackamoor take me, I ain't much lighter within. Although I'm no nigger, I look it, And haven't beeao better taught Than aeein' a Bobby, to hook it, - In course, to avoid bein' caught. We're very much like one-another. We are, arte r all's that said and done. If he is a man and a brother, Why ain't I a boy and a son ? . And has, too, 'is place in creation, No doubt but my owa is the same, Toung monkey without eddication ; And who is the parties to blame ? But while for all washin' and rubbia The nigger a nigger will be, Your honors with some little scrabbin' - May make a white Christian 0f INTERESTING AHMY LETTER. - Mr. Ha kpx9. Tlafc following graphic letter from one of Sherman 'a dramthr boye ma? prove intwesVmg to many of Vxlr readers, and P5!5B J?' ipwialjBterest TO youraelf, aa the ;uer aa jormerlv a ttetabcr of the Ml -Ver. oom'rjpogTophieal icsorpa :-;'A' ; -;. ALaxkHbaiA, Va., May 22d, 1865. . .'' " . . , You will see by the date of tMa letter, that I am nearer borne now than I have been for soma time. . One year ago, to-day, our Regt. (61st 0, 0. V. I.) was for the second time engaged with Hood's army, after reporting back to the field from veteran furlough, and since that time we have been almost continually on the more, and we are now lying at rest near the Poto mac, after one of the longest and bardeet campaigns of the war. I will give you as nearly as I can the distances to the different places we have 'been marched. From Chattanooga to Atlanta, one hundred and thirty miles- Atlanta to Savannah, three hundred miles- from there to Goldsboro', via Columbia and Winsboro', S. S., four hundred and ninety- six miles from Goldsboro' to Raleigh, K. C, fifty-five miles Raleigh to Richmond, one hundred and eighty-fire miles Richmond to Alexandria, one hundred and thirty-one miles; making in all a march of twelve hundred and ninety-seven miles. So you may well suppose we are sorely in want of rest. I had only two pairs of shoes and two pairs of pants in all that time, that I drew from Government. If you had seen me when I came into Goldsboro yOu would hare laughed. I was attired as follows: a Southern Confederacy Palmetto straw hat, with the rim half torn off! And mv hair stick. ng out at the top ; one old boot without a heel and one shoe, a number twelve, with my toes out in front: a pair of rebel pants, with corporal's stripes down the leg, and on one knee an normous patch of XJ. S. blue ; ou the other a hole of about six inches in diameter. aervel the place of a patch. To crown all, a coat that had once been the pride of some dashing confederate officer, with a star -on each side of toe collar and two rows of buttons on the breast and gold lace on the sleeve, from the cuff to the elbow, not forgetting the spike tail, which came down to jot "calves." Of tails I ann- pose it once had an ample share, but when I got this never-to-be-forgotWn plec of gobds. or yor most recollect that spike tail are generally lh twb parts, arid this was the case with fiiitie,) was almost torn off. lace, buttons and all. and looked rerr much to ma aa if tha gallant weifet had been In a very great hurt ry in getting through a thltket. With a Tank; or two after him for Instance, in tha fight of the 20th of July last, at Peachra Creek Lastly, I carried, instead of a drum, a rebel carbine, which I had used to defend mrself whenever attacked by a fat youn bog or sheep or when sometimes obliged to abed blbba lh Ihb poultry yard of some wealthy old rebel, to' aare-not exactly my life, bot jaty reputation as a fdrragtr, or eommooly tanned brimmer.1 Iamnot alone in respect.' . Thaaintira aray tjere tnorepr leea drtsstd as t waa. . fa fact, when oUr Regt. wdttt to Kewbera with prison era, the people wgndeted to aea rabela guarding f ?,r.f M coaM not see th8 diA fertnee, ao far as coat am 7a cSeettwd, and aeraral asked m where I was ptaretL ranet nol be in roogrkat a Iwj tot mi lo'cbma ere I thic as I tare stood it eeara andvmc;re" id taa ecu, i can worry tnrocb twenty .two omvior tae report pow uthat.au thsf yetaf onig to pe.t?f ,Cot;jiie,ter?a.f?r wic wa mQntha In gamsonTand besldTWeiriiliLii el furloughs. We are now consolidated !th the 92dO. V. V. I. ; - All the Ut. Vernon boya art well.. Colonel McGroarty is here, commanding the regiment. . " VTrite soon, and gire me the history of ererything and erery body within the corporation, for the last nix months. '. v'. :. ' ' ":" Jack. '-' ITet Terr Complimentary to the Keir England Puritan. ? The editor of the Chicago Times notices the statistical fact that the children of foreign pa rents m Massachusetts, born erery year, now exceed the births of natire parents in a man ner by no means complimentary to our pleasant and self-satisfied oouotrymen near the rising of the sua. It says : '. :' There is a comforting assurance in thecon" tem plat ion of these facts that eoes far toward- dissipating the fear, entertained by many, that Puritanism is about to inundate this continent. One can notice in this decrease in the natire New England stock the working of one of . na ture's wisest .provisions. We find in examin ing tbe eooneiuy of animal reproduction that fecundity in a species is in the reverse propor1 tton to its harm fulness. Lions, tieers. ele phants, hyenas, and other beasts of destructive natures, propagate with difficulty, and only at long intervals- On the other 'hand, animals, whose existence is of value to the World, mul tiply with rapidity, and to an extent that defies extinction. . ; , i "Man is only a sort of superior animal ; and there is no reason to doubt 'that nature : har. embodied in the economy of the human vann the same provisions which are used torr-rnlA.te the increase of inferior species. It : may be that precisely the fiama means are not employed in the case of raracious anH Mimx. tive races Of men that are used to hindar .thii undue increase of the sam types amone the lowef orders of animal Vife. Thus, whil the constitutional characteristics of th bloodthirsty tiger or the destructive elephant pre vent procreation, berond a certain and limited extent, the same result is reached by different, but not less sure means, in tbe cases of destructive clap'aes of mankind. a - ''In place of putting 'rats and mice' in her front hair, and cultivating her back hair, and her appearance and emotions with reference, to securing a husband, the Massachusetts Mies puts on a pair of spectacles, and cultivates theology and philanthropy with reference to the amelioration of the condition of the odorous bondmen of the South. In place of gravitating toward maternity, the -Puritan-daughters lend toward school-teaching. Instead of anxiously anticipating the time when ehe shall love, care for, and educate her own children, the New England maiden looks forward to the time when Blie shall be permitted to superintend a few dozen young niggers somewhere in the 'Sunny South." :. ,v If the Times doea'not look 0ut, tbe Massa? chuaetta -women will put rata and mieax4n 4is Appearanee of .General Bherman. v The Cleveland (O.) Leader - thus ' describes the personal appearance -of General Sherman who has lately passed through that city; It says:... ' . " He has a fine figure, is tall, slim, and wears an extremely nervous aspect. The pho-tdgraphers give his head with 'consjdeeable correctness, although art has given . him a more Websterian brow than nature allows.- His head is massive, broad high and deep. His eye. is full, and of a hasel color; we judged in the gas light. It is restless, and when not bent sharply on distance has an introverted expression. His nose -is prominent and wears a fierce, insatiate, hungry expression, resembling a symetar. His sandy beard is close cropped, and moustache $nd goatee of light color. The lines of his face around the eyes and mouth are very expressive, and a physiognomist would say: Here ii a man born to command. And yfetthere is nothing in the man's appearance calculated to infuse awe into one approaching him. This' is due to tbe fact that be puts on no 'style' whatever and also to tha fact already: noted, that he seems so self-involved and unconscious of others. Hedoes Udt seem to see you, and that absehce of scrutiny relieves one of the fright one usually feels in the presence of th great." the Opposition of the Badicali. The Nashville Union, which may per b ape, be regarded as the home oran. of President Johnson, in its issue of the 6th inst.,' says: -The failure of the Administration to coma up to tbe standard of the most progressive of the anti-slavery Radicals, will, probably, cause the formation of a strori? onnoaiiion party, composed of active, enterprising aggres sive elements. The loss of thea tn tlf A. ministration party might be regarded with seriousness, were it not for the assurance that their places wonld soon be filled by Headier and more reliable supporters. . If this should be me result; the country would be benefitted by the change. '- "The holier of c.WMntTa aHa n bHHli hti. IctteFfet!, and igtirjraht not only of the ordinary affairs Of ebvernment. but of bnsineaa life: with the ballot, is not a thincr to be determin ed in the midst of excitement, and without da- Iiberatjoa. Too much is inrolred in tha re sult to justify any thing like haste or want of proper investigation. The interest of both ra ces, our institutions, are in the scale. Wa trust, therefore, that, notwithsUnding the demands of the inconsiderate, the Administration will not be swerved from the matured nnlinv announced." . w . . - asaa "t - ' flood Adtiee. I '. Governor Magrath, of South Carolina. : who has been recently, arrested by the Federal au thorities, in-an addrea to the people of that Sute, girea taemi the following good advitte:. "Whatever ; may ba your condition, unavailing resistance on jour part will: bnt make It wft With an earnestness of the sincerity of which I-may r not give yoa the assurance, I iirrt noon you the resumpt!on of rour peaceful Jie adaptldh of yoUr selves to those cbanges which may be made in fpUi cbhditions Do no be misled by excite-ment gfre no hfM fec?Kn, ; deal resoltttj-, ly with . fact! ; look the truth calmly in. the face ; spill no more blood ; accept with the dig-fTi fch: evW Isfooeai command, the codQition which joa can noi. avert. tdttfolto ayi of .georg'eThofflp. f21 eueaiingBiinto the free h'gro auffrage:; i-4.4nr. H "Thia man cornea 'Ifrbhl' &' c bunfrv where some thrtetaillidna of white 'i.en are denied the i 'b t of tha;electire ' fraaci : "ls d, yet Lis 4?a.Dud?nce and eCmntrv .t -1 tr,f- Jest,riBS AmericaDa for net grant: nj the . ballot to negnft$f-:c'i . , :.:;."' : QEN. SHERMANS REfOBT Qi MILITARV ' OPERATIONS AND NEGOTIATIONS IN NORTH CAROLINA: f We hare at length the enbatadce of the cor-jrespon4eocei of Qeneral Slerlirti eVertng his operationa in North' Carolina, his hegotiauons and armistice with General -Jopnson, etc.; all of which haa been, for eome mysteribua rea soiib withheld from the public till now. " . .Tha first docutnthi tth this list ia a dispatch from General Shrtnan to General Grant, as follows : ' ;' .- : . RAtkioH, N. C, A pril 28, 1865; J65. j ; GfefeftAL Since you left- ne yesterday, I bare seen the Newxork' Ifcn.'ql the 24th. containing a budget -Of military "he, w8, authenticated by the signature f the"' Secretary v-of W ar, which is grouped in such a war as to give rery erroneous imprenaionai It embraces a copy of tbe basis or 'agreement between myself and General Job nsoijof April 18, with commentaries, which it will, be time enough to discuss two or three yeats-bnce, after the government haa experimented a little jpore in the machinery by which oar power reaches Che scattered people of the raa't area of .country known as the South; 4But in the mean time, I do think that my rank, if -not past service, entitled me at least to tha respect of keeping secret what was knowa ; to none but:, the Cabinet until further inquiry e&uld hare bf en made, instead of giving pabTtcTty to doenmenta I "never saw, and. drawing: Inferences wide of the truth. I v never saw or had furnished me a copy of President Lincoln's-dispatch to you of the 5th of March until after the agreement ; nor did Mr. Stanton, or any -hinnan being, ever convey to me its substance Or anything like it. . But on tha contrary. I bad seen. General Weitzel'8 invitation to. the Virginia Legislature, made in MrLincOln's rery presence, and had failed todiacqrer any other official notice of a plan of reconstruction; or any idea calculated to allay the - fears of-the people of the Sodth that after, .the . destruction - of the. armies and civil authorities they, would be left without any govern nrent atVall.';.We should not drive a people into anarchy, and it is sim ply impossible for our military power, to reacu ui lue resources orioeir nnuappy country; I confess I did not. wish . to . break Genk Johnston's army into bands of armed "men, moving' about without' pufpose, and capable onl f : of infinite 'm isch ief. - But .- you saw . on your arrival that I bad my army so disposed that hfs escape was.- only possible' in a disorganized shape and as ro.n'did not. choose to direct military'operationa in this quarter, I in ftr you were satisfied, with; the - military Eitira-tion. ; At.: an--eventi.th ifi8tant-s I- learned. bat was properepouf tW. disappTuv'tf. the President. Nietd t . UIHDDrUTHL Ul compel tbe-srrender of,j Iifniton.'s whole- army on the same..rterms.yous prescribed to General Lee's-army. when you had it: surrounded and in your abebluteTwer..f V. : : a. tlr. Staji ton,: In etati ngi that j'my orde to General Stoneman were liltely to result in the escape1 of Mir. Davis to:; Mexico or -Europe, is in deep error.'- Stoneraan ,Tvas hot at Salis bury then,'- but had gone : baclcj to. States V111& Davis was supposed to ibe between -"us and therefore t Stoneman 'was mbeyond.'ihi ni.l;. By turning towards me he' waejtpproacbing Da-Vla. and had he joined me, as ordered, Twould have had a, niounttd force greallV" needed .for that and btber purposes ; bVe7R no 1 don't k now that Mr. Stanton -wants Dav is caught ; and as my official, papers, deemed; eacred, are hastily published to the? world, it will . be imprudent for me to state what has been done in that respect, as the editor of the Times has. It may be logically and fairly drawn from this singular document the. conclusion, that t am insubordinate. .. I can only deny the intention. I have never in tny life questioned or disobey ed an order, though' many and many a time have I risked my -life, my-health and reputation in obeying orders or even hints to execute plans and purposes not to- iny liking. It is not fair to withhold from me plana and policy, if any there be, and expect me to guess ht them as facta. and events appear quite different from different standpoints. . .- - . , . , i. For four yeara I have been in camp dealing wkh soldiers, and I can assure you' that the conclusion at which tbe Cabinet arrived with such singular unanimity differs from mine. I conferred freely with the best officer in this army as to the points involved in this con tro-ressy, and, strange to say, they Were singularly unanimous in the other conclusion ; and they will learn with pain and amazement that lam deemed insubordinate and.wanting in common secse : that I- whri.ib the 'complications of last year, worked day and night, sum mer and winter, for the cauae.and the administration, and who hare brought 'an army of seventy thousand men - in magnificent style abross a country deenied impaasaole, and placed it just where it waa wanted almost on the day. appointed,' hare brought discredit on our govern- aent.- I ao noi wian ouast oi.mia; out -i dear that It entitled me to the courtesy of being consul te-1 before publishing to the world a proposition rightfully submitted to higher authority for adjudication; and then accompanied by other statements which invited the press to be let loose tipon me. - It ia true that non-combatants men who sleep in comfort and security while we watch on the distant lines-are better able to judge than we poor aoldiers, who rarely see a newspaper, hardly can bear from oar families, or stop long enough to get our pay. a- :. v ' '-" -' : I envy not I be task or reconstruction, .and am delighted ibat the Secretary, has .relieved ma of it. Aa yd'd did hot Undertake to assume the management of the affairs of this afttly, I infer, on personal inspection, your mind ar-rired at a different conclusion from ; that of the Secretary of'War. .I will therefore, go on and execute your order! ' to their concluaion, and when doiie Will, with intense satisfaction. learl the civil authormee to the execution of the task of which they ieem to be so jealbui ; but, as aa honest man abd soldier, invite them to follow my path, for they may see'sometbing and beaf Something lhat max disturb-their ftotoa6pjV Withaineere Teepect, r W. Ti SHE RM AN Major GeVi Com'g. -.Lieut. Geo: U. a GaAKT, Gen'l-itt-Cbief. & "WisaiwotbjrrtJ- Chv;r' ; Si -;P;;8.A.a HriUhtonUjgiilar Vaper liai been pnbllslied; I demAnd that . thn. also be made rjbbl Hough I am in : no: manner re- re of; JohnstoVaMayTS-tba: eubstenfcevcf which hai 7mdy oscn ;ii!;iVe Jy . TfcV0,$- iponslbl.pjute.f resa. cut to tb a law ; and jdt prober-Baperiora. ."' -"-'-'5"t-rV ;-lc t7. Tv SUCnAlT, li;3rG"eimH- -5 .We riext hare a detailed report , of : General jhef ana'orrationa ; ead theci f 'eratl'dSa' of .Cie-caeajvCrc JCrTil'tstdorra ,y- tfii'catK ,-tirna pays- hi-respeclaTd Gen Halleck : V. : ;-::. . ,-': , :; "Johnston's army (April 14th).was retreating rapidly on the road leading from Hillsboro to Greensboro, he himself being at Greensboro. Although out of laoe aa to time. I her invito all military eritica who study the problems of war lo iase tueir maps and compare the positions of my army on the 15th and 16th of April with that of Gen. Halleck about Borkea-rille and Petersburg, Virginia, on the 26th ef April, when according to his telegram to Secretary Stanton, he offered to relieve me of the task of cutting off Johnston's retreat. Maior General Stoneman at that time waa at States- ville, and Johnston's only line of retreat was by Salisbury and Charlotte. It mi ha that General Haileck's trod pa can outmarch mine; vuk uvic ,a uuiuiug iu iueir pa i numry' to. show it ; or it may be that General HaUeck can inspire his troops with more energy of ac tion, x aouoi mat aiso, save and except in th is single instance,: when he knew the enemy waa ready to surrender or disperse, as advised by my letter of ; April 18, addressed to him When chief of staff at Wasbineton citrl aad delivered into his hands On the 21st instant. by Major Hitchcock, of my staff. The following" is Gen. Sherman's own rer- sion of his interriew with Gen. Johnston; ore- ; . - - . - - - ' - ' ceding the surrender of the latter : ' .. "We met Johnston on April 17. as arranged. Tbe interview jras frank and soldierlike. Gen. Johnston gave him to understand that farther war on the part of the Confederate troops waa folly that the cause was lost, and that erery life sacrificed after tbesurrender of Lee's army was the highest ' possible-, crime. Johnston admitted the terma- conceded to General Lee Were maguanimoua and all he could ask, but wanted some concessions that would enable him to maintain his control over them until they could be got back to their homes. He also wanted to embrace in the same general proposition the fate of all the Confederate ar mies that remained in existence. I never made any concessions as to his own army, or assumed to deal finally or authoritatively in regard to any other ; but it did seem . to me that there was presented a chance for peace that might be esteemed valuable to the gorem ment of tbe United states, and waa at -least worth the few days there would be consumed In reference thereto. To push an armyl whose csWniander had so frankly and honestly eon- Kssea nis lnaouiiy to cope wun me, werecow ardly, and unworthy the brare men I led. ' They met again on the 18th, and renewed the conversation. " He. ears; "Inasmuch aa General Johnston did no't feel authorised to pledge hts power orer the armies in Texas, we aljourned to meet tbe-next day at-.nooa.' I returned to Raleigh,nd conferred freely .with" all iiiy general officers, every one of whom urged me to conclude terms, that might acedfri-plish so complete and desirable aa end. All dreaded the weary and . laborious march after a "fugitive and dissolving army back towards Georgia almost over the very country-where r nau, toiled ao long.- - mere waa but one opinion .expressed, and if the contrary ones were en tert eined they were withheld "Cr indulged in otv!y.Vr that class "wbo "shun the fleht 1 .-v . - -. . . . .. . . - fiercesCwhen dinget " ia i past. . ' Ifteainmet General, Jphnstpn on the lSthVaod,,. and we renewed f be conversation. He satisfied "the then of his power to disband - tlie rebel armies in . Alabama, MUaisei )pi, Louisiana, and Tex-' as, as well aa those in fits immediate command, namely Xortli ' Carolina,- South Carolina, Florida, nd.Ueorgia. The: points on Which He expressed solicitude were lest those States Were id be dismembered and denied rep'resen- tatioh Jn Congress, or any . separate bolitical existence whatever, and that absolute disarming of bis men. Would leave the South powerless and : exposed to depredations by wicked batidB 9t' assassins and robbers.. President Lincoln's message of 1864, his amnesty 'proclamation, and General Grant's terms to Gener al Lee, which substantially extended the bene fits OT that proclamation to all officers above the rank of colonel, and the- invitation to the Virginma Legislature to reassemble in Richmond by General Weitzel, with the 'approval of Mr. Lincoln and General Grant, then on the spot; a firm beliefJ bat I had been fighting to re-establish the constitution of the . United States; and last, and not least, tbe general and last, and not least, the general and universal desire to close a war any longer without or ganized resistance, were the .leading facts that induced me to pen tbe .'memorandum of April lo, signed by myself and General Johnston- it waa aesignea 10 ve, ana so expressea on its face, as a mee 'bases' for reference to the President of the United States and constitutional Commander-in-Chief, ' to - enable himi, if he chose, at one blow, to dissipate the military power of the Confederacy which had threatened the national safety for years. It admitted of modifications, alterations, and change. It had no appearance of an ultimatum, and by no false reasoning can it be construed into a usurpation of power on my part. I. have my opinions oh the questions involved, and will stand by the memoradum. But this forma no part of a military report." General Sherman then proceeds to say that, ereti when the news of President Lincoln's. assassination reached him, on the 17th of April, be "waa duly impressed with ita hor rible atrocity and probable -effect upon the bountrf." ':V '"":' "But" (he goea oh to say) "when the prop erty and interests or millions still living were involved, 1 saw no good reason to change my course: but.thoueh rather to mahifest real re spect for liii memory by following after hia aeata uat poucy wuicn. ii living, x leu cer tain he would hare approred, or at least not rejected with disdain. Up to that hour I had never received one word of instruction, advice or counsel aa to the 'plan dr policy' of the government looking to a restoration of peace on the part of the rebel States of the South. Whenerer asked fox an opinion on the points inrolred I had always evaded the subject. JUy Jetter to the JSaVdr tit Atlanta baa been published to the world, and I wa not rebuk ed by tha War Department for-it General Sherman then girea his ideas upon reconstruetldn, and refers to interviews: "witli Mr. Stanton lh which the latter appeared to approve hia sentiments, and had urged upon him the importance or bringing the war to a close for financial reasona. '. On the 29 tn Major Hitchcock returned, W companied by General Grant and a member of hie - staff, bringing - information thai ' tbe memorandum' waa disapproved and orders to giH at tibee this fdrty-e:ght houri' QbUce,'and resume hostf litres at th e loee of that titHe. v. ' General Sherman says: overted Jtnyself by the substance of a oispatcn . tnen. eociosea, aaiea xiarco 9,; l o clock noon, at wasbJngtofl-.jJistrict cfCbl cnbiaV Jxom: Secretary, Stanton ' to . G en eral Gran Vf t Citr Point, but not,ecpcl4aied fct ipjt pft it tpejrolaminoui maijr eo. liberal- lyjarishei upon the patac lathe Ntw Yczk josrnaIa-cfthe,r::.h of April. vTfcat -wts tL tm ana oniy tice j. iver tsrr ttxr telrraa c had ona wordf of inatrucUoo oier "ui erj wardroom loaier in New York can read id the morning journals official maUar that ia withheld from a Gener al whose command extends from Kentucky to . Farther on the General aaysi . -:' . i,, "Within an hour a courier was ridlnv from Durham's station toward Hillsboro, with oik tice to General Johnston of the suspension of ine truce, ana renewing my demand for the surrender of the armies under hia immediate command. I therefore published mr Order No. 62 to the troops, terminating the truce at 12, M., on the 26th. and ordered all to h in readiness to march at that hour on the routes prescribed in Special Field Older No. 55, of April 14, from the positions held April 18. All things were - in readiness to .advance, when, on the morning of the 25th, he receiv ed another letter from Gen. Johnston, askin? another interriew. Under the approbation of uen. urant, anotner meeting was arranged and took place at two o'clock on the afternoon .1 ll : S..aa. - . a-. VTT . aa - - ; oi iub ui uaj. . ve men," ne says, "consulted, concluded and signed the final terms a r . - ret a. . - .... oi capitulation, i uese were taken by me back to General Grant, and met his approval and aignature. "Thus waa surrendered to ua the second great army of the so called confederacy,' and inougu unaue importance naa Deeo ; given to tbe so-called negotiations - which preceeded it, and a rebuke and public disfavor cast on me wholly unwarranted by the facts,. I rejoice in saying it was accomplished without further rain and devastation to the country, without tbe loss of a single life to those gallant men wb6 had followed me from the Mississippi td tne Atlantic, and without subjucting brave men to the nngracioua task of pursuing a flee ing foe that dd not want to fight. As for myself, I know my motives, and challenge the instance during the past four years- where an armed and defiant foe stood before me that I did not go in for a fight; and I would. blush for shame if I had ever insulted or struck a fallen foe. - v ; - - He says, after stating the djieratlona of the next three days, and alluding to continued confidence, respect and affection exhibited towards him by Gen. Grant. 'I still adhere to my then opinions.Lthat by a lew general concessions 'glittering geiieralHIes' all of which in the end roust and will be conceded to - tbe organized Stated of the South, that this day there would not be an armed battalion opposed to us within tbe broad area , of the dominioas .of the United States. Robbers and assassins must m any event result from the disbandment of large armies, but even those should be and could be taken care of by the local civil aii-thdrltie8 Without being made a charge on the national treasury." - General Sherman then goc3 dn at considerable length and with much severity,' to com-.ment on General -HaVlecka order, ridiculing the idea of cutting off the retreat of Johnston's army from Burkesville and Danrille. - "The last and most dbnoiious feature"' of Gen. Haileck's dispatch is wherein he goes otit of hia way and advises that subordiates. Gen- - erala Thofloaaeja. tonjeman-aWiUou-ahoHld be instructedr not lo bey Sherman Vk;coMt naida.;TfiIa la too Wcfi; and I.-tnrti -from the subject with feelings too strong for words. and merely record-my belier that so; much mischiel waa never before em braced in so small a space in-the newspaper paragraph headed 'Sherman's Truce Disregarded," authenticated aa official by Secretary Stanton, and published in the New York papera of April 28." Appended to the report ia a short correspondence between General G ran t'a Adjutant Gen-eneral, communicating the GeneraTs dissent from General Sherman's opinion in regard to the binding effect of trace upon other commanders, and General "Sherman's replyrestating and defending thpse opinio1 lis with much v;gor and ability, concluding as follows : " - : '- , 'I prefer jidt to change my. report, but again repeat, that in all future , cases I am willing to be governed by this interpretation of Gen. Grant, although..! again invite his attention td the limits of my command'and those of General Halleck at the tirti, and tbe pointed phraseolegy of Gen. Haileck's despatch to Mr. Stanton, wherein he reports that he had ordered his Generals to pay no heed to -my or ders within the clearly defined area of my com- mana.- - r . A Point 2Iade in the Jefferson Davis Trial ,--; The Dayton (O.) Empire makes the following point in connection with the trial of Mr. Daris. We think it well taken : ' Thb TaiAL or Jxrrsasow Dans. AThfere seems to be no doilbt now that the charge of complicity in the assassination of President Lincoln, on the strength of which a reward of $100,000 was offered for the arrest of Mr. Daris, is to be abandoned and the prisoners put on trial for treason. The bill of Indictment drawn by District Attorney Carrington and returned by the Grand-Jury, is published. It predicates the. charge bpon tbe attack on Fort Strong, near Washington, by Early dad Breck-enridge last July. " . ' It is due to President Johnsbh. reputation, to the dignity of tbe Government and to Mr. Davis, that the charge of his complicity in the assassination should be withdrawn as formally as it was made, or he be given an opportunity to disprove it. The utter failure of the evidence adduced by Stanton and Holt to implicate any of the Southern men named, lea res the impression that they intended to stigmatize them with the . infamous .charge, without being called Upon for tbe evidence upon which it rested. Tbe clamor, of the press against a secret star-chamber, trial, obliged them to open the doors of their court." and expose the character of the " Bureau ,of Military Justice." They didn't expect to capture Davis, but fired this poisoned arrow. after him, jriat as Stab ton shoj at Sherman. -: in each case the dander bay re turned to plague its aUthar8- : : 1ho ui Get Up the Bebelliont . The Una of argument Indulged in by the Abolitionists who are demanding the extension of suffrage to. the emancipated slaves, is that ifsuffrage b n ejoded to thetri, ther will be pracuealiy reeneUved, - and we shall soon hare a Rebellion on onr hands again. . Who will get up the Rebellion,: supposing snch an event tooecor? , It k not very probable the SoathiUiflisr It f ecaatLitlSid ahd . diaatroua experience, will agaia erubatk in such itn enT ttrpriae. v Dothe ,tbolitioniaU intend- to get it hp if tUey cannot Sara the Black." elft tated into the position they want him elevated intoStMtesmen.' : '--I- : ' : zf, , ., .'v :' -"iJCSr There-are"two delegatiopa Ifronx erery CothtraStale ia Tash.insnto' cbnsttjt with (:a.eithoritiea'on reconstruction-. Thrsedele-Citions are generally applicants for Federal appoiatmtnU. PresidntJohne;a E&s .iatf-d'itsd ttat he wi!Ivnct be in a burrV , about P4kiu tti apoictfctsU -:v .:- - , ment received the' following in formation of tLe capture of the defences of the Sabine Pass, lb entrance to Galreaton Texas: ; - -- ..... ' ; . N'ewttatkAss, May 31. ; ' Sia I hare the honor to inforni-your De--balrtmentthat a dispatch, under-date of the 25th inst, was this day received fooia Captain . B. F. Sands, reporting the . evacuation of the-defences of Sabine Paas, ' Forts Mann, Whar-. - rett and GrifSni Acting volunteer Lieutenant T Commander Pennington hoisted the .United, . States flag on these, forts. The guns, fire id numbfer were spiked. Fort Griffin ia described as having fire bomb . proofs -corered.-with two feet of solid timber, two. layers , of Tail-road iron and four feet of arch on top. ' There were four magazines of like construction. ' Lfeut. Pennington left force , enough to bold r-.i the forth and retired to his vessel, Jreav.ing the-American fiag flying. - - - , - .-. CapU Sands, under date of the 20th of May, reports the rebels of Texas disbanded and gone home, and the terms of surrender recently xe- - ' cuted in New. Orleena between the rebel commanders, sent by Gen. Hirby Smith and Gen. Can by, having been complied with ontha part of the rebels, it only remains for us to occupy the fortifications. With regard lo rebelnavai-forces in Texas, I am assuretl by, the- Confederate Lieilt.-Com Jonathan Cooler, wltb ta now here and declares himself to be the senior a a? ! ral officer, that there is no naval property, nor any officers In Texas on the seaboard, and oiUy neressel in the Rel river thexam Miasoury which will le surrendered to the commandef , of .the Mississippi squadron . ,, ., i Very respectfully, Ac., " ' .;. II. R. TUACHEK, To Gideon Welles, See'y of the Navy. Discoveries in Ari6ha; . During the trlpcf fte "Willing Mining and.- Exploring Expedition," from New Yor,k. to ; San Francisco, performed during 1804, numer: bus relies oau'eieht seulinents,; etc., were disr . covered. A cOrresbohdebt of the St. . Louie Republican savs i- '. . -... ;- ' '-- Broken pottery is found strewn over all the parts traveled over. - Ancient forts,, situated ou the highest peak of hilla aud mountains, : are numerous; and towns pf...cbnsiderbljsize are seen in almostevtery valley of note throughout the entire region of Ari'tona, proving Aha the country was eettled in fonder, times by 4 better and more industrious race than it hi present tribes of thieving murderoua .ndiansv called Apacheria.. It is not sUohja matter, of specUIatfon o define lhe,caiiseij which anihi-lated the people who baVe eft eucli marks of : ciVilizatioti. behind them." Volcawoea, of mora than StroVnboli or Vesuvius here, and it is probable that the broad and - lengthy Volcani9 jtie8"es, tbe surface of which is covered with-lupa, niay conceal. in their great depha-cities Of greater magnitude in Arizo'na, torsay tbe least of the immense ruins left visible.- j '.-. .. Here, from all appearance of ; former settle: ment of tbe country, lived and perished a wise, proud,-and- semi-civilized, race of people, rich. 4a thHgrea4 resources of the country f which , . perhaps in a tuohth "was made desolate by tbe throes of volcanoes,: whose huge craters made, a large gap in. the contour of the earth's acf. These volcanio eruptions happening at diuVr: ent periods, and loosening the earth's' cruet. together with the upheave! of the igneoua rocks, hare created immense seams . in . tha rocks; and tbe diintegration Of the rocks "ao upheaved formed alight porduasoU..; ; Consequently one reason for the noo existence of flowing eteams outside of the great, Colorado basin, the majority of .the water being canted off by .undergxpand rirers. , The. lask. of bor--ing artesian wells will produce jsn, abundancy of water wherever needed ou desert, plain br y ral ley. . -.' : - : " - 1 - : : V-'.rj - ' ... r Oli. .7 .v.-' . Our Pike county friends hare just cause for, foing slightly deranged on the matter .of TLL ast week a gentleman a few miles from . VLe-rerly, while modestly prospecting on hia own. hook, found the liquid in considerable quaati- ty at a distance of sixty Xeet. 4. company- 91-Leith Creek found it in small duantiueaat na considerable depth. But the climax was capped on Friday, when the jear Breek companf struck a vein at the depth of six hundred feet Which has bfeen flowing from the surface aver since; at tbe rate of about eeven hundred gal - Ions per day. This is no fiction .for -the" ptfr pose of selling stocks, but the facts aa; related to us by eye witnessea of reliability.' Tuere is do doubt that Pike county ia one pf,Ui.finit oil fields in the country.. ,'We all learn : that the company which ia boring at Londonderry,-in this county, has every prospect of success. ' Tha gas haa on several occasion ' forced.' .the augurs to the surface.. We are- undoubtedly fioatipg upou a raet iidervoit of oil whicli only reon ires tapping to bring it to - tbe' suiface ChUXcoihe Advertiser. . . - ' - Qrfiitifyins InfonnaUon-rA JTeededProc1 laaation frost, the President. -;; . The New York. W3a of pttj .xoo-twins' the follawi.pg:, Mf - -. J:'Wj joyfully, bear: and believe that th. President will speedily - issue a proclamation!' restoring the privilege of habeas cwffM, and ordering a very general clearance of the miU tary prisons. The paroling of prisoner of war on their takjng the oath of aJirgiancax.i going forward rapidly, and, we trnst, will .not cease while any willing to take the oathtd not accused of violating tha rn!ea-of.civUite4 warfare, remain in durance Tha country -ia " fwiftly returaintoMhf'ways' cf fcaee, order tbrlft, and law-guarded liberty. --Let os hope " that the approaching Fourth of July will see. all mere prisoners of war liberated, and the. civil law erery-wbere bearing tinriratid sway."- " r j .' .i' ... - . . . 8. V.: ;r ; The Chicago ifournal, diacaating ; u pon tlie cHn?e in that city, says - -I.----; ' - Our local oolumas teeta with highway -robt beriea. hoase-breakingSr pocketrpicking; a 4 the marvelons achieVmenta 01 the conSJen'da' . t harpers. Tha curtain of the night is scarce ly down, before the-vlllianf are -abroad and busy In the early gra of tha arening, oe the most frequented aranueai the honest and unsuspecting ciJixen is hogged to aUence y, the arm of eae garroter biU tbe Cngera .ot another lift hia watch, oci his fob, rand hvs." pars frooi hia rket-.V.-?rSen'"etrn ioi horie frota prayer.- meeUo'gU6aa.'all tha-" a&ered keensakea he has about him. by tbe handa of a pair: of rufSana, at .nice o'clock ' i a theeveniag, in the heart of the metropolis..-v .' " . "eeX ' " -- ? -. " 't3 There wasquiteaieriens r'ot j TTh, fa gtoni 6n Sato rda y i a w h io b, 1 1 3 to C - toU diera were engaged. The-fbt r-i ti Serenth'Ward. and wai between clrrei c.ii-rena and white soldiers icth csirj n . ' -: re. T7 James C- .iher 1, n t ci i: .1 ''a' . . - 3 h-v: employ of ' w Cx, ; fcturtrs,,at C-Ullcc:-?, 1-i;.' fitji trra'c t, lis tz.tlztrfi ;

V- vhB-:'!'A4 :r-'; ill .-ll urn? ' Volume JUNE 1865. NUMBER - . "" ----- 'iirMraM UtiA V- -a- w. 7-30 230,000,000. ' By authority of the Secretary of the Treasury, the undersigned, the Genera! Subscription Agent for tin iu .of United State Securities, offer to th pnblio f aa thtr3 eerie of Treasury Note, being seven and -jtaree-tenth per cent, interest per annum, known m 7-30 ; r.Tnese note are isned under date of Jnly 15, 1805, mad art payable three years from that date in cer-Ireney, or are eoarertibio at the option of the holder Into . ' N - . fj. S. 5-SO Six per eeni. : bop-BSAZima sozxss, The Bond are now worth a handicme premium, and are exempt, a are all the Goremment Bonds, from State, County, and Municipal taxation, tckic add from mm to tkrme per cent, per annum to their balm, aeeordiag to the rate leried upon other property. The interest is payable Mmi-annually by coupon attached to eaoh note, which may be cut off and (fold, to any feanlt or banker. The interest at Y.30 percent, aatoants to AaeceBt per day on $50 note. Two cento $IOO $300 Ten . . 81 " ITote of all the . t 1000 $5000 denominations ' named will be promptly furnished upon receipt of subscriptions- The notes of this Third Series are precisely similar in form and privileges to the Seren-Tbirties already sold, exeept that the Government reserves to itself the option of paying interest in gold coin at 6 per cent instead of 7 3-10tna in currency. Subscribers Will deduct the interest in currency up to July 15th. at the t 'm i when they subscribe. Tha delivery of the note of this third series of the Seven-thirties will commence on the 1st of June, and will be made promptly and eoatinuously ' after tha1 date; v x . , .'-.-,;:::: . . , The slight change made la the condition of this TH1BD SERIES affects only the matter of interest-Tha payment in gold, if made, will be equivalent to the currency interest of the higher rate. 'The return to specie payments, in the event of which only will the option to pay interest in Gold be availed of, would so reduce and equalise prices that purchases made with six per cent, in gold woald bo fully equal to those made with seven and three-tenth per eeat. in currency. This is i . THE ONLY LOAH IS 2IABZET JTow offered by the Government, and its superior ad-r Village make it tha . " ,v. ' f ' Great Popular Loan of the People. "i Less tHaa $230,000,000 of the Loan authorised by Congress axe Mow. on the market. . This amount, at the late aAwMen-U ie Mag abeorbewlll all be sub-criWd for- within -sixty days,'&an the notes will undoubtedly command a premiam, as has uniform! teen the case on closing the subscription to ouer Xoans. - - . ... ' " " ' " . la order that eitisens of every town and ler'.ion of the country may be afforded facilities for trying the . Lean, the National Banks, State Baab., vnd Private Bankers throughout the country have generally agreobt to receive subscription at rar. Subscribers will select their own agents, in whom they have con-' fldenoe, and who only an- to be responsible tot the delivery of the note f',r which they receivn orders; ' JAT C00KB, . - - Subecription Agent, Pkita : JST; Subscriptions received by the Firtt National 'Srnnt of lfomnt Vernon, and Knox County Motional Bank of Momnt Vernon. :. June 3 :Certincate of Authority Knox County National BanR of . llonnt. Vernon. TRBASURYDEPARTMENT, Omr"CoPTaoLLi:B of the Ccrrbnct . . : Wi-aaixoTOir, April 25th, 1865. TTTHEREAS. bv satis factorv evidenc nmunU . f f to the narferstgaed, it has been made to appear tkat "The Kaox County National Bank of Mount ; Veraon," ia the City of Mount Vernon, in the county ' of Knox, and State ef Ohio, has been duly organised ander and aeeordiag to the requirements of the Act ef Congress, aatitled Aa Act to provide a National Currency, secafwi by a pledge of United States Bonds, and to provide for the circulation and redemption thereof," approved Jane 3d, and has complied with all the previsions of said Act required to be eompiieo. witt before commencing the business of Baakiac.aAaersaid ast; v . . - . If ow, therefore, I, Freeman Clarke.Comptroller of aha Carreue do hereby certify that " The Knox O0aaty National Bank of Mount Vernon," in- the City af Mount Vernoa, in the County ef Knox, and tha State ef Ohio, is authorized to eommeaoe the business .of Banking ander the Aet aforesaid. In tastlmonv whereof, vitnui mv lknl . MJtAJ land seal of office, tkia t.n.lHk Am-m .r af a f m m m m . -Apnifieaa. - i , FREEMAN CLARKE, -May 13-604. Comptroller of the Currency CLOSING UP BUSINESS ... . V .. . . - . ' -in onms orm : IllTviftT County National Bank of Mount r Vernons T Y -A ' BXSOLUTIOJr adopted at a stockholder V meeting of thi-3ank, on the 13th last. a- mroved kvth HrA tirr.ntotr! nn ffca'Ifttli ( , Ika been datomined to close up tha business of the -Knox County Bank. Z?7- ttorJ,wby given .that on aad after ,the lstday of Jane (Prox.) this Bank wUl ebaie la - lVX.?pti- th,eoUctinre-St-?, iMivablaaad ether due, aad payment of iU debt. VPh f?! At 0OBt U balanees on . t i& aiUx iSa date above mentioned will be tran. ; jaredtb '.,. , , '.' w ' tS lIaox Conaty Uatiowd Bank t ziounv Ternoni wnien as niuir tn tv. tr : ' ':-7 .B"Wrt,W tt Banking room, v i i taWgd itcexJttjc'oajaion to the pablteZ . :".Cii9- l-cuUtion or other lUbiliUeeef the KEet Cocr r r nx,wta be paid on praseatatioa at the i Connt-r efts lijo f wy a auooal Bank. May 21--3w.. . .. . - - .' -. .- IT ' m i.. . A 7 l.LiiC W TpRCSxa thnt hi friends wUl sot fajite finlhxm r iL : K H1l lat.a.iT . .tv. a m a : . , lest .'r:.,. VAlao rood aL -jTCI j - , I i. taiTd and forala by f17 ," " - ruBiirIit. LOAN -. . , -'Cab .hnMT..w.tH. Line on Che CelebrtUlon of eaee. IT TBOMA aOOD. - And- is it thus ye welcome Peace, From mouths of forty-pounding Bores ? O, eease exploding Cannons ! eeaae. Least Peaee affrighted, than oar shore 1 Not ao the quiet Queen should come ; But like a Nurse to still ear Fears, With shoes of List, demurely dumb, And Wool and Cotton in our Ears 1 " She asks for ao triumphal Arch ; No Steeples for their noisy Tongues; Down Drumsticks, down ! She needs no March, . Or blasted Trump! from brasen Lungs. She wants no Noise of mobbing Throat . To tell that She is drawing nigh ; Why this Parade of scarlet Coats, When War ha elosed his bloodshot eye ? Returning to Domestic Loves, When War ha ceased, witW all it Hi, Captains should come like sackiag Doves, With Olive Branches in tfeeir Sills. No need there is of vulgar Shout, Bells, Cannons, Trumpet, Fife and Drum, To let us know that Peace is come; And Soldiers marching all about. Lo ! where the Soldier walk, alas ! With Scars received on Foreign Grounds ; Shall we consume in colored Glac The Oil that should be pour'd in wounds t The bleeding Gap of War to close. Will whining Rockets' Flight avail? Will Squibs enliven Orphans' Woes? - Or Crackers cheer tha Widow's Tale? Punch, in its issue ftr March a, tha happily hits the people who run wild over the negroes, regardless of the wants of poor people at home: Ain't I black enough to be cared for ? I'm not a black nigger, 'tis true. As armies and fleets are prepared fur. And misaionaries i sent te. But I'm black as dirt can well make me, And if, by the look of my skin, You'd sigh for a blackamoor take me, I ain't much lighter within. Although I'm no nigger, I look it, And haven't beeao better taught Than aeein' a Bobby, to hook it, - In course, to avoid bein' caught. We're very much like one-another. We are, arte r all's that said and done. If he is a man and a brother, Why ain't I a boy and a son ? . And has, too, 'is place in creation, No doubt but my owa is the same, Toung monkey without eddication ; And who is the parties to blame ? But while for all washin' and rubbia The nigger a nigger will be, Your honors with some little scrabbin' - May make a white Christian 0f INTERESTING AHMY LETTER. - Mr. Ha kpx9. Tlafc following graphic letter from one of Sherman 'a dramthr boye ma? prove intwesVmg to many of Vxlr readers, and P5!5B J?' ipwialjBterest TO youraelf, aa the ;uer aa jormerlv a ttetabcr of the Ml -Ver. oom'rjpogTophieal icsorpa :-;'A' ; -;. ALaxkHbaiA, Va., May 22d, 1865. . .'' " . . , You will see by the date of tMa letter, that I am nearer borne now than I have been for soma time. . One year ago, to-day, our Regt. (61st 0, 0. V. I.) was for the second time engaged with Hood's army, after reporting back to the field from veteran furlough, and since that time we have been almost continually on the more, and we are now lying at rest near the Poto mac, after one of the longest and bardeet campaigns of the war. I will give you as nearly as I can the distances to the different places we have 'been marched. From Chattanooga to Atlanta, one hundred and thirty miles- Atlanta to Savannah, three hundred miles- from there to Goldsboro', via Columbia and Winsboro', S. S., four hundred and ninety- six miles from Goldsboro' to Raleigh, K. C, fifty-five miles Raleigh to Richmond, one hundred and eighty-fire miles Richmond to Alexandria, one hundred and thirty-one miles; making in all a march of twelve hundred and ninety-seven miles. So you may well suppose we are sorely in want of rest. I had only two pairs of shoes and two pairs of pants in all that time, that I drew from Government. If you had seen me when I came into Goldsboro yOu would hare laughed. I was attired as follows: a Southern Confederacy Palmetto straw hat, with the rim half torn off! And mv hair stick. ng out at the top ; one old boot without a heel and one shoe, a number twelve, with my toes out in front: a pair of rebel pants, with corporal's stripes down the leg, and on one knee an normous patch of XJ. S. blue ; ou the other a hole of about six inches in diameter. aervel the place of a patch. To crown all, a coat that had once been the pride of some dashing confederate officer, with a star -on each side of toe collar and two rows of buttons on the breast and gold lace on the sleeve, from the cuff to the elbow, not forgetting the spike tail, which came down to jot "calves." Of tails I ann- pose it once had an ample share, but when I got this never-to-be-forgotWn plec of gobds. or yor most recollect that spike tail are generally lh twb parts, arid this was the case with fiiitie,) was almost torn off. lace, buttons and all. and looked rerr much to ma aa if tha gallant weifet had been In a very great hurt ry in getting through a thltket. With a Tank; or two after him for Instance, in tha fight of the 20th of July last, at Peachra Creek Lastly, I carried, instead of a drum, a rebel carbine, which I had used to defend mrself whenever attacked by a fat youn bog or sheep or when sometimes obliged to abed blbba lh Ihb poultry yard of some wealthy old rebel, to' aare-not exactly my life, bot jaty reputation as a fdrragtr, or eommooly tanned brimmer.1 Iamnot alone in respect.' . Thaaintira aray tjere tnorepr leea drtsstd as t waa. . fa fact, when oUr Regt. wdttt to Kewbera with prison era, the people wgndeted to aea rabela guarding f ?,r.f M coaM not see th8 diA fertnee, ao far as coat am 7a cSeettwd, and aeraral asked m where I was ptaretL ranet nol be in roogrkat a Iwj tot mi lo'cbma ere I thic as I tare stood it eeara andvmc;re" id taa ecu, i can worry tnrocb twenty .two omvior tae report pow uthat.au thsf yetaf onig to pe.t?f ,Cot;jiie,ter?a.f?r wic wa mQntha In gamsonTand besldTWeiriiliLii el furloughs. We are now consolidated !th the 92dO. V. V. I. ; - All the Ut. Vernon boya art well.. Colonel McGroarty is here, commanding the regiment. . " VTrite soon, and gire me the history of ererything and erery body within the corporation, for the last nix months. '. v'. :. ' ' ":" Jack. '-' ITet Terr Complimentary to the Keir England Puritan. ? The editor of the Chicago Times notices the statistical fact that the children of foreign pa rents m Massachusetts, born erery year, now exceed the births of natire parents in a man ner by no means complimentary to our pleasant and self-satisfied oouotrymen near the rising of the sua. It says : '. :' There is a comforting assurance in thecon" tem plat ion of these facts that eoes far toward- dissipating the fear, entertained by many, that Puritanism is about to inundate this continent. One can notice in this decrease in the natire New England stock the working of one of . na ture's wisest .provisions. We find in examin ing tbe eooneiuy of animal reproduction that fecundity in a species is in the reverse propor1 tton to its harm fulness. Lions, tieers. ele phants, hyenas, and other beasts of destructive natures, propagate with difficulty, and only at long intervals- On the other 'hand, animals, whose existence is of value to the World, mul tiply with rapidity, and to an extent that defies extinction. . ; , i "Man is only a sort of superior animal ; and there is no reason to doubt 'that nature : har. embodied in the economy of the human vann the same provisions which are used torr-rnlA.te the increase of inferior species. It : may be that precisely the fiama means are not employed in the case of raracious anH Mimx. tive races Of men that are used to hindar .thii undue increase of the sam types amone the lowef orders of animal Vife. Thus, whil the constitutional characteristics of th bloodthirsty tiger or the destructive elephant pre vent procreation, berond a certain and limited extent, the same result is reached by different, but not less sure means, in tbe cases of destructive clap'aes of mankind. a - ''In place of putting 'rats and mice' in her front hair, and cultivating her back hair, and her appearance and emotions with reference, to securing a husband, the Massachusetts Mies puts on a pair of spectacles, and cultivates theology and philanthropy with reference to the amelioration of the condition of the odorous bondmen of the South. In place of gravitating toward maternity, the -Puritan-daughters lend toward school-teaching. Instead of anxiously anticipating the time when ehe shall love, care for, and educate her own children, the New England maiden looks forward to the time when Blie shall be permitted to superintend a few dozen young niggers somewhere in the 'Sunny South." :. ,v If the Times doea'not look 0ut, tbe Massa? chuaetta -women will put rata and mieax4n 4is Appearanee of .General Bherman. v The Cleveland (O.) Leader - thus ' describes the personal appearance -of General Sherman who has lately passed through that city; It says:... ' . " He has a fine figure, is tall, slim, and wears an extremely nervous aspect. The pho-tdgraphers give his head with 'consjdeeable correctness, although art has given . him a more Websterian brow than nature allows.- His head is massive, broad high and deep. His eye. is full, and of a hasel color; we judged in the gas light. It is restless, and when not bent sharply on distance has an introverted expression. His nose -is prominent and wears a fierce, insatiate, hungry expression, resembling a symetar. His sandy beard is close cropped, and moustache $nd goatee of light color. The lines of his face around the eyes and mouth are very expressive, and a physiognomist would say: Here ii a man born to command. And yfetthere is nothing in the man's appearance calculated to infuse awe into one approaching him. This' is due to tbe fact that be puts on no 'style' whatever and also to tha fact already: noted, that he seems so self-involved and unconscious of others. Hedoes Udt seem to see you, and that absehce of scrutiny relieves one of the fright one usually feels in the presence of th great." the Opposition of the Badicali. The Nashville Union, which may per b ape, be regarded as the home oran. of President Johnson, in its issue of the 6th inst.,' says: -The failure of the Administration to coma up to tbe standard of the most progressive of the anti-slavery Radicals, will, probably, cause the formation of a strori? onnoaiiion party, composed of active, enterprising aggres sive elements. The loss of thea tn tlf A. ministration party might be regarded with seriousness, were it not for the assurance that their places wonld soon be filled by Headier and more reliable supporters. . If this should be me result; the country would be benefitted by the change. '- "The holier of c.WMntTa aHa n bHHli hti. IctteFfet!, and igtirjraht not only of the ordinary affairs Of ebvernment. but of bnsineaa life: with the ballot, is not a thincr to be determin ed in the midst of excitement, and without da- Iiberatjoa. Too much is inrolred in tha re sult to justify any thing like haste or want of proper investigation. The interest of both ra ces, our institutions, are in the scale. Wa trust, therefore, that, notwithsUnding the demands of the inconsiderate, the Administration will not be swerved from the matured nnlinv announced." . w . . - asaa "t - ' flood Adtiee. I '. Governor Magrath, of South Carolina. : who has been recently, arrested by the Federal au thorities, in-an addrea to the people of that Sute, girea taemi the following good advitte:. "Whatever ; may ba your condition, unavailing resistance on jour part will: bnt make It wft With an earnestness of the sincerity of which I-may r not give yoa the assurance, I iirrt noon you the resumpt!on of rour peaceful Jie adaptldh of yoUr selves to those cbanges which may be made in fpUi cbhditions Do no be misled by excite-ment gfre no hfM fec?Kn, ; deal resoltttj-, ly with . fact! ; look the truth calmly in. the face ; spill no more blood ; accept with the dig-fTi fch: evW Isfooeai command, the codQition which joa can noi. avert. tdttfolto ayi of .georg'eThofflp. f21 eueaiingBiinto the free h'gro auffrage:; i-4.4nr. H "Thia man cornea 'Ifrbhl' &' c bunfrv where some thrtetaillidna of white 'i.en are denied the i 'b t of tha;electire ' fraaci : "ls d, yet Lis 4?a.Dud?nce and eCmntrv .t -1 tr,f- Jest,riBS AmericaDa for net grant: nj the . ballot to negnft$f-:c'i . , :.:;."' : QEN. SHERMANS REfOBT Qi MILITARV ' OPERATIONS AND NEGOTIATIONS IN NORTH CAROLINA: f We hare at length the enbatadce of the cor-jrespon4eocei of Qeneral Slerlirti eVertng his operationa in North' Carolina, his hegotiauons and armistice with General -Jopnson, etc.; all of which haa been, for eome mysteribua rea soiib withheld from the public till now. " . .Tha first docutnthi tth this list ia a dispatch from General Shrtnan to General Grant, as follows : ' ;' .- : . RAtkioH, N. C, A pril 28, 1865; J65. j ; GfefeftAL Since you left- ne yesterday, I bare seen the Newxork' Ifcn.'ql the 24th. containing a budget -Of military "he, w8, authenticated by the signature f the"' Secretary v-of W ar, which is grouped in such a war as to give rery erroneous imprenaionai It embraces a copy of tbe basis or 'agreement between myself and General Job nsoijof April 18, with commentaries, which it will, be time enough to discuss two or three yeats-bnce, after the government haa experimented a little jpore in the machinery by which oar power reaches Che scattered people of the raa't area of .country known as the South; 4But in the mean time, I do think that my rank, if -not past service, entitled me at least to tha respect of keeping secret what was knowa ; to none but:, the Cabinet until further inquiry e&uld hare bf en made, instead of giving pabTtcTty to doenmenta I "never saw, and. drawing: Inferences wide of the truth. I v never saw or had furnished me a copy of President Lincoln's-dispatch to you of the 5th of March until after the agreement ; nor did Mr. Stanton, or any -hinnan being, ever convey to me its substance Or anything like it. . But on tha contrary. I bad seen. General Weitzel'8 invitation to. the Virginia Legislature, made in MrLincOln's rery presence, and had failed todiacqrer any other official notice of a plan of reconstruction; or any idea calculated to allay the - fears of-the people of the Sodth that after, .the . destruction - of the. armies and civil authorities they, would be left without any govern nrent atVall.';.We should not drive a people into anarchy, and it is sim ply impossible for our military power, to reacu ui lue resources orioeir nnuappy country; I confess I did not. wish . to . break Genk Johnston's army into bands of armed "men, moving' about without' pufpose, and capable onl f : of infinite 'm isch ief. - But .- you saw . on your arrival that I bad my army so disposed that hfs escape was.- only possible' in a disorganized shape and as ro.n'did not. choose to direct military'operationa in this quarter, I in ftr you were satisfied, with; the - military Eitira-tion. ; At.: an--eventi.th ifi8tant-s I- learned. bat was properepouf tW. disappTuv'tf. the President. Nietd t . UIHDDrUTHL Ul compel tbe-srrender of,j Iifniton.'s whole- army on the same..rterms.yous prescribed to General Lee's-army. when you had it: surrounded and in your abebluteTwer..f V. : : a. tlr. Staji ton,: In etati ngi that j'my orde to General Stoneman were liltely to result in the escape1 of Mir. Davis to:; Mexico or -Europe, is in deep error.'- Stoneraan ,Tvas hot at Salis bury then,'- but had gone : baclcj to. States V111& Davis was supposed to ibe between -"us and therefore t Stoneman 'was mbeyond.'ihi ni.l;. By turning towards me he' waejtpproacbing Da-Vla. and had he joined me, as ordered, Twould have had a, niounttd force greallV" needed .for that and btber purposes ; bVe7R no 1 don't k now that Mr. Stanton -wants Dav is caught ; and as my official, papers, deemed; eacred, are hastily published to the? world, it will . be imprudent for me to state what has been done in that respect, as the editor of the Times has. It may be logically and fairly drawn from this singular document the. conclusion, that t am insubordinate. .. I can only deny the intention. I have never in tny life questioned or disobey ed an order, though' many and many a time have I risked my -life, my-health and reputation in obeying orders or even hints to execute plans and purposes not to- iny liking. It is not fair to withhold from me plana and policy, if any there be, and expect me to guess ht them as facta. and events appear quite different from different standpoints. . .- - . , . , i. For four yeara I have been in camp dealing wkh soldiers, and I can assure you' that the conclusion at which tbe Cabinet arrived with such singular unanimity differs from mine. I conferred freely with the best officer in this army as to the points involved in this con tro-ressy, and, strange to say, they Were singularly unanimous in the other conclusion ; and they will learn with pain and amazement that lam deemed insubordinate and.wanting in common secse : that I- whri.ib the 'complications of last year, worked day and night, sum mer and winter, for the cauae.and the administration, and who hare brought 'an army of seventy thousand men - in magnificent style abross a country deenied impaasaole, and placed it just where it waa wanted almost on the day. appointed,' hare brought discredit on our govern- aent.- I ao noi wian ouast oi.mia; out -i dear that It entitled me to the courtesy of being consul te-1 before publishing to the world a proposition rightfully submitted to higher authority for adjudication; and then accompanied by other statements which invited the press to be let loose tipon me. - It ia true that non-combatants men who sleep in comfort and security while we watch on the distant lines-are better able to judge than we poor aoldiers, who rarely see a newspaper, hardly can bear from oar families, or stop long enough to get our pay. a- :. v ' '-" -' : I envy not I be task or reconstruction, .and am delighted ibat the Secretary, has .relieved ma of it. Aa yd'd did hot Undertake to assume the management of the affairs of this afttly, I infer, on personal inspection, your mind ar-rired at a different conclusion from ; that of the Secretary of'War. .I will therefore, go on and execute your order! ' to their concluaion, and when doiie Will, with intense satisfaction. learl the civil authormee to the execution of the task of which they ieem to be so jealbui ; but, as aa honest man abd soldier, invite them to follow my path, for they may see'sometbing and beaf Something lhat max disturb-their ftotoa6pjV Withaineere Teepect, r W. Ti SHE RM AN Major GeVi Com'g. -.Lieut. Geo: U. a GaAKT, Gen'l-itt-Cbief. & "WisaiwotbjrrtJ- Chv;r' ; Si -;P;;8.A.a HriUhtonUjgiilar Vaper liai been pnbllslied; I demAnd that . thn. also be made rjbbl Hough I am in : no: manner re- re of; JohnstoVaMayTS-tba: eubstenfcevcf which hai 7mdy oscn ;ii!;iVe Jy . TfcV0,$- iponslbl.pjute.f resa. cut to tb a law ; and jdt prober-Baperiora. ."' -"-'-'5"t-rV ;-lc t7. Tv SUCnAlT, li;3rG"eimH- -5 .We riext hare a detailed report , of : General jhef ana'orrationa ; ead theci f 'eratl'dSa' of .Cie-caeajvCrc JCrTil'tstdorra ,y- tfii'catK ,-tirna pays- hi-respeclaTd Gen Halleck : V. : ;-::. . ,-': , :; "Johnston's army (April 14th).was retreating rapidly on the road leading from Hillsboro to Greensboro, he himself being at Greensboro. Although out of laoe aa to time. I her invito all military eritica who study the problems of war lo iase tueir maps and compare the positions of my army on the 15th and 16th of April with that of Gen. Halleck about Borkea-rille and Petersburg, Virginia, on the 26th ef April, when according to his telegram to Secretary Stanton, he offered to relieve me of the task of cutting off Johnston's retreat. Maior General Stoneman at that time waa at States- ville, and Johnston's only line of retreat was by Salisbury and Charlotte. It mi ha that General Haileck's trod pa can outmarch mine; vuk uvic ,a uuiuiug iu iueir pa i numry' to. show it ; or it may be that General HaUeck can inspire his troops with more energy of ac tion, x aouoi mat aiso, save and except in th is single instance,: when he knew the enemy waa ready to surrender or disperse, as advised by my letter of ; April 18, addressed to him When chief of staff at Wasbineton citrl aad delivered into his hands On the 21st instant. by Major Hitchcock, of my staff. The following" is Gen. Sherman's own rer- sion of his interriew with Gen. Johnston; ore- ; . - - . - - - ' - ' ceding the surrender of the latter : ' .. "We met Johnston on April 17. as arranged. Tbe interview jras frank and soldierlike. Gen. Johnston gave him to understand that farther war on the part of the Confederate troops waa folly that the cause was lost, and that erery life sacrificed after tbesurrender of Lee's army was the highest ' possible-, crime. Johnston admitted the terma- conceded to General Lee Were maguanimoua and all he could ask, but wanted some concessions that would enable him to maintain his control over them until they could be got back to their homes. He also wanted to embrace in the same general proposition the fate of all the Confederate ar mies that remained in existence. I never made any concessions as to his own army, or assumed to deal finally or authoritatively in regard to any other ; but it did seem . to me that there was presented a chance for peace that might be esteemed valuable to the gorem ment of tbe United states, and waa at -least worth the few days there would be consumed In reference thereto. To push an armyl whose csWniander had so frankly and honestly eon- Kssea nis lnaouiiy to cope wun me, werecow ardly, and unworthy the brare men I led. ' They met again on the 18th, and renewed the conversation. " He. ears; "Inasmuch aa General Johnston did no't feel authorised to pledge hts power orer the armies in Texas, we aljourned to meet tbe-next day at-.nooa.' I returned to Raleigh,nd conferred freely .with" all iiiy general officers, every one of whom urged me to conclude terms, that might acedfri-plish so complete and desirable aa end. All dreaded the weary and . laborious march after a "fugitive and dissolving army back towards Georgia almost over the very country-where r nau, toiled ao long.- - mere waa but one opinion .expressed, and if the contrary ones were en tert eined they were withheld "Cr indulged in otv!y.Vr that class "wbo "shun the fleht 1 .-v . - -. . . . .. . . - fiercesCwhen dinget " ia i past. . ' Ifteainmet General, Jphnstpn on the lSthVaod,,. and we renewed f be conversation. He satisfied "the then of his power to disband - tlie rebel armies in . Alabama, MUaisei )pi, Louisiana, and Tex-' as, as well aa those in fits immediate command, namely Xortli ' Carolina,- South Carolina, Florida, nd.Ueorgia. The: points on Which He expressed solicitude were lest those States Were id be dismembered and denied rep'resen- tatioh Jn Congress, or any . separate bolitical existence whatever, and that absolute disarming of bis men. Would leave the South powerless and : exposed to depredations by wicked batidB 9t' assassins and robbers.. President Lincoln's message of 1864, his amnesty 'proclamation, and General Grant's terms to Gener al Lee, which substantially extended the bene fits OT that proclamation to all officers above the rank of colonel, and the- invitation to the Virginma Legislature to reassemble in Richmond by General Weitzel, with the 'approval of Mr. Lincoln and General Grant, then on the spot; a firm beliefJ bat I had been fighting to re-establish the constitution of the . United States; and last, and not least, tbe general and last, and not least, the general and universal desire to close a war any longer without or ganized resistance, were the .leading facts that induced me to pen tbe .'memorandum of April lo, signed by myself and General Johnston- it waa aesignea 10 ve, ana so expressea on its face, as a mee 'bases' for reference to the President of the United States and constitutional Commander-in-Chief, ' to - enable himi, if he chose, at one blow, to dissipate the military power of the Confederacy which had threatened the national safety for years. It admitted of modifications, alterations, and change. It had no appearance of an ultimatum, and by no false reasoning can it be construed into a usurpation of power on my part. I. have my opinions oh the questions involved, and will stand by the memoradum. But this forma no part of a military report." General Sherman then proceeds to say that, ereti when the news of President Lincoln's. assassination reached him, on the 17th of April, be "waa duly impressed with ita hor rible atrocity and probable -effect upon the bountrf." ':V '"":' "But" (he goea oh to say) "when the prop erty and interests or millions still living were involved, 1 saw no good reason to change my course: but.thoueh rather to mahifest real re spect for liii memory by following after hia aeata uat poucy wuicn. ii living, x leu cer tain he would hare approred, or at least not rejected with disdain. Up to that hour I had never received one word of instruction, advice or counsel aa to the 'plan dr policy' of the government looking to a restoration of peace on the part of the rebel States of the South. Whenerer asked fox an opinion on the points inrolred I had always evaded the subject. JUy Jetter to the JSaVdr tit Atlanta baa been published to the world, and I wa not rebuk ed by tha War Department for-it General Sherman then girea his ideas upon reconstruetldn, and refers to interviews: "witli Mr. Stanton lh which the latter appeared to approve hia sentiments, and had urged upon him the importance or bringing the war to a close for financial reasona. '. On the 29 tn Major Hitchcock returned, W companied by General Grant and a member of hie - staff, bringing - information thai ' tbe memorandum' waa disapproved and orders to giH at tibee this fdrty-e:ght houri' QbUce,'and resume hostf litres at th e loee of that titHe. v. ' General Sherman says: overted Jtnyself by the substance of a oispatcn . tnen. eociosea, aaiea xiarco 9,; l o clock noon, at wasbJngtofl-.jJistrict cfCbl cnbiaV Jxom: Secretary, Stanton ' to . G en eral Gran Vf t Citr Point, but not,ecpcl4aied fct ipjt pft it tpejrolaminoui maijr eo. liberal- lyjarishei upon the patac lathe Ntw Yczk josrnaIa-cfthe,r::.h of April. vTfcat -wts tL tm ana oniy tice j. iver tsrr ttxr telrraa c had ona wordf of inatrucUoo oier "ui erj wardroom loaier in New York can read id the morning journals official maUar that ia withheld from a Gener al whose command extends from Kentucky to . Farther on the General aaysi . -:' . i,, "Within an hour a courier was ridlnv from Durham's station toward Hillsboro, with oik tice to General Johnston of the suspension of ine truce, ana renewing my demand for the surrender of the armies under hia immediate command. I therefore published mr Order No. 62 to the troops, terminating the truce at 12, M., on the 26th. and ordered all to h in readiness to march at that hour on the routes prescribed in Special Field Older No. 55, of April 14, from the positions held April 18. All things were - in readiness to .advance, when, on the morning of the 25th, he receiv ed another letter from Gen. Johnston, askin? another interriew. Under the approbation of uen. urant, anotner meeting was arranged and took place at two o'clock on the afternoon .1 ll : S..aa. - . a-. VTT . aa - - ; oi iub ui uaj. . ve men," ne says, "consulted, concluded and signed the final terms a r . - ret a. . - .... oi capitulation, i uese were taken by me back to General Grant, and met his approval and aignature. "Thus waa surrendered to ua the second great army of the so called confederacy,' and inougu unaue importance naa Deeo ; given to tbe so-called negotiations - which preceeded it, and a rebuke and public disfavor cast on me wholly unwarranted by the facts,. I rejoice in saying it was accomplished without further rain and devastation to the country, without tbe loss of a single life to those gallant men wb6 had followed me from the Mississippi td tne Atlantic, and without subjucting brave men to the nngracioua task of pursuing a flee ing foe that dd not want to fight. As for myself, I know my motives, and challenge the instance during the past four years- where an armed and defiant foe stood before me that I did not go in for a fight; and I would. blush for shame if I had ever insulted or struck a fallen foe. - v ; - - He says, after stating the djieratlona of the next three days, and alluding to continued confidence, respect and affection exhibited towards him by Gen. Grant. 'I still adhere to my then opinions.Lthat by a lew general concessions 'glittering geiieralHIes' all of which in the end roust and will be conceded to - tbe organized Stated of the South, that this day there would not be an armed battalion opposed to us within tbe broad area , of the dominioas .of the United States. Robbers and assassins must m any event result from the disbandment of large armies, but even those should be and could be taken care of by the local civil aii-thdrltie8 Without being made a charge on the national treasury." - General Sherman then goc3 dn at considerable length and with much severity,' to com-.ment on General -HaVlecka order, ridiculing the idea of cutting off the retreat of Johnston's army from Burkesville and Danrille. - "The last and most dbnoiious feature"' of Gen. Haileck's dispatch is wherein he goes otit of hia way and advises that subordiates. Gen- - erala Thofloaaeja. tonjeman-aWiUou-ahoHld be instructedr not lo bey Sherman Vk;coMt naida.;TfiIa la too Wcfi; and I.-tnrti -from the subject with feelings too strong for words. and merely record-my belier that so; much mischiel waa never before em braced in so small a space in-the newspaper paragraph headed 'Sherman's Truce Disregarded," authenticated aa official by Secretary Stanton, and published in the New York papera of April 28." Appended to the report ia a short correspondence between General G ran t'a Adjutant Gen-eneral, communicating the GeneraTs dissent from General Sherman's opinion in regard to the binding effect of trace upon other commanders, and General "Sherman's replyrestating and defending thpse opinio1 lis with much v;gor and ability, concluding as follows : " - : '- , 'I prefer jidt to change my. report, but again repeat, that in all future , cases I am willing to be governed by this interpretation of Gen. Grant, although..! again invite his attention td the limits of my command'and those of General Halleck at the tirti, and tbe pointed phraseolegy of Gen. Haileck's despatch to Mr. Stanton, wherein he reports that he had ordered his Generals to pay no heed to -my or ders within the clearly defined area of my com- mana.- - r . A Point 2Iade in the Jefferson Davis Trial ,--; The Dayton (O.) Empire makes the following point in connection with the trial of Mr. Daris. We think it well taken : ' Thb TaiAL or Jxrrsasow Dans. AThfere seems to be no doilbt now that the charge of complicity in the assassination of President Lincoln, on the strength of which a reward of $100,000 was offered for the arrest of Mr. Daris, is to be abandoned and the prisoners put on trial for treason. The bill of Indictment drawn by District Attorney Carrington and returned by the Grand-Jury, is published. It predicates the. charge bpon tbe attack on Fort Strong, near Washington, by Early dad Breck-enridge last July. " . ' It is due to President Johnsbh. reputation, to the dignity of tbe Government and to Mr. Davis, that the charge of his complicity in the assassination should be withdrawn as formally as it was made, or he be given an opportunity to disprove it. The utter failure of the evidence adduced by Stanton and Holt to implicate any of the Southern men named, lea res the impression that they intended to stigmatize them with the . infamous .charge, without being called Upon for tbe evidence upon which it rested. Tbe clamor, of the press against a secret star-chamber, trial, obliged them to open the doors of their court." and expose the character of the " Bureau ,of Military Justice." They didn't expect to capture Davis, but fired this poisoned arrow. after him, jriat as Stab ton shoj at Sherman. -: in each case the dander bay re turned to plague its aUthar8- : : 1ho ui Get Up the Bebelliont . The Una of argument Indulged in by the Abolitionists who are demanding the extension of suffrage to. the emancipated slaves, is that ifsuffrage b n ejoded to thetri, ther will be pracuealiy reeneUved, - and we shall soon hare a Rebellion on onr hands again. . Who will get up the Rebellion,: supposing snch an event tooecor? , It k not very probable the SoathiUiflisr It f ecaatLitlSid ahd . diaatroua experience, will agaia erubatk in such itn enT ttrpriae. v Dothe ,tbolitioniaU intend- to get it hp if tUey cannot Sara the Black." elft tated into the position they want him elevated intoStMtesmen.' : '--I- : ' : zf, , ., .'v :' -"iJCSr There-are"two delegatiopa Ifronx erery CothtraStale ia Tash.insnto' cbnsttjt with (:a.eithoritiea'on reconstruction-. Thrsedele-Citions are generally applicants for Federal appoiatmtnU. PresidntJohne;a E&s .iatf-d'itsd ttat he wi!Ivnct be in a burrV , about P4kiu tti apoictfctsU -:v .:- - , ment received the' following in formation of tLe capture of the defences of the Sabine Pass, lb entrance to Galreaton Texas: ; - -- ..... ' ; . N'ewttatkAss, May 31. ; ' Sia I hare the honor to inforni-your De--balrtmentthat a dispatch, under-date of the 25th inst, was this day received fooia Captain . B. F. Sands, reporting the . evacuation of the-defences of Sabine Paas, ' Forts Mann, Whar-. - rett and GrifSni Acting volunteer Lieutenant T Commander Pennington hoisted the .United, . States flag on these, forts. The guns, fire id numbfer were spiked. Fort Griffin ia described as having fire bomb . proofs -corered.-with two feet of solid timber, two. layers , of Tail-road iron and four feet of arch on top. ' There were four magazines of like construction. ' Lfeut. Pennington left force , enough to bold r-.i the forth and retired to his vessel, Jreav.ing the-American fiag flying. - - - , - .-. CapU Sands, under date of the 20th of May, reports the rebels of Texas disbanded and gone home, and the terms of surrender recently xe- - ' cuted in New. Orleena between the rebel commanders, sent by Gen. Hirby Smith and Gen. Can by, having been complied with ontha part of the rebels, it only remains for us to occupy the fortifications. With regard lo rebelnavai-forces in Texas, I am assuretl by, the- Confederate Lieilt.-Com Jonathan Cooler, wltb ta now here and declares himself to be the senior a a? ! ral officer, that there is no naval property, nor any officers In Texas on the seaboard, and oiUy neressel in the Rel river thexam Miasoury which will le surrendered to the commandef , of .the Mississippi squadron . ,, ., i Very respectfully, Ac., " ' .;. II. R. TUACHEK, To Gideon Welles, See'y of the Navy. Discoveries in Ari6ha; . During the trlpcf fte "Willing Mining and.- Exploring Expedition," from New Yor,k. to ; San Francisco, performed during 1804, numer: bus relies oau'eieht seulinents,; etc., were disr . covered. A cOrresbohdebt of the St. . Louie Republican savs i- '. . -... ;- ' '-- Broken pottery is found strewn over all the parts traveled over. - Ancient forts,, situated ou the highest peak of hilla aud mountains, : are numerous; and towns pf...cbnsiderbljsize are seen in almostevtery valley of note throughout the entire region of Ari'tona, proving Aha the country was eettled in fonder, times by 4 better and more industrious race than it hi present tribes of thieving murderoua .ndiansv called Apacheria.. It is not sUohja matter, of specUIatfon o define lhe,caiiseij which anihi-lated the people who baVe eft eucli marks of : ciVilizatioti. behind them." Volcawoea, of mora than StroVnboli or Vesuvius here, and it is probable that the broad and - lengthy Volcani9 jtie8"es, tbe surface of which is covered with-lupa, niay conceal. in their great depha-cities Of greater magnitude in Arizo'na, torsay tbe least of the immense ruins left visible.- j '.-. .. Here, from all appearance of ; former settle: ment of tbe country, lived and perished a wise, proud,-and- semi-civilized, race of people, rich. 4a thHgrea4 resources of the country f which , . perhaps in a tuohth "was made desolate by tbe throes of volcanoes,: whose huge craters made, a large gap in. the contour of the earth's acf. These volcanio eruptions happening at diuVr: ent periods, and loosening the earth's' cruet. together with the upheave! of the igneoua rocks, hare created immense seams . in . tha rocks; and tbe diintegration Of the rocks "ao upheaved formed alight porduasoU..; ; Consequently one reason for the noo existence of flowing eteams outside of the great, Colorado basin, the majority of .the water being canted off by .undergxpand rirers. , The. lask. of bor--ing artesian wells will produce jsn, abundancy of water wherever needed ou desert, plain br y ral ley. . -.' : - : " - 1 - : : V-'.rj - ' ... r Oli. .7 .v.-' . Our Pike county friends hare just cause for, foing slightly deranged on the matter .of TLL ast week a gentleman a few miles from . VLe-rerly, while modestly prospecting on hia own. hook, found the liquid in considerable quaati- ty at a distance of sixty Xeet. 4. company- 91-Leith Creek found it in small duantiueaat na considerable depth. But the climax was capped on Friday, when the jear Breek companf struck a vein at the depth of six hundred feet Which has bfeen flowing from the surface aver since; at tbe rate of about eeven hundred gal - Ions per day. This is no fiction .for -the" ptfr pose of selling stocks, but the facts aa; related to us by eye witnessea of reliability.' Tuere is do doubt that Pike county ia one pf,Ui.finit oil fields in the country.. ,'We all learn : that the company which ia boring at Londonderry,-in this county, has every prospect of success. ' Tha gas haa on several occasion ' forced.' .the augurs to the surface.. We are- undoubtedly fioatipg upou a raet iidervoit of oil whicli only reon ires tapping to bring it to - tbe' suiface ChUXcoihe Advertiser. . . - ' - Qrfiitifyins InfonnaUon-rA JTeededProc1 laaation frost, the President. -;; . The New York. W3a of pttj .xoo-twins' the follawi.pg:, Mf - -. J:'Wj joyfully, bear: and believe that th. President will speedily - issue a proclamation!' restoring the privilege of habeas cwffM, and ordering a very general clearance of the miU tary prisons. The paroling of prisoner of war on their takjng the oath of aJirgiancax.i going forward rapidly, and, we trnst, will .not cease while any willing to take the oathtd not accused of violating tha rn!ea-of.civUite4 warfare, remain in durance Tha country -ia " fwiftly returaintoMhf'ways' cf fcaee, order tbrlft, and law-guarded liberty. --Let os hope " that the approaching Fourth of July will see. all mere prisoners of war liberated, and the. civil law erery-wbere bearing tinriratid sway."- " r j .' .i' ... - . . . 8. V.: ;r ; The Chicago ifournal, diacaating ; u pon tlie cHn?e in that city, says - -I.----; ' - Our local oolumas teeta with highway -robt beriea. hoase-breakingSr pocketrpicking; a 4 the marvelons achieVmenta 01 the conSJen'da' . t harpers. Tha curtain of the night is scarce ly down, before the-vlllianf are -abroad and busy In the early gra of tha arening, oe the most frequented aranueai the honest and unsuspecting ciJixen is hogged to aUence y, the arm of eae garroter biU tbe Cngera .ot another lift hia watch, oci his fob, rand hvs." pars frooi hia rket-.V.-?rSen'"etrn ioi horie frota prayer.- meeUo'gU6aa.'all tha-" a&ered keensakea he has about him. by tbe handa of a pair: of rufSana, at .nice o'clock ' i a theeveniag, in the heart of the metropolis..-v .' " . "eeX ' " -- ? -. " 't3 There wasquiteaieriens r'ot j TTh, fa gtoni 6n Sato rda y i a w h io b, 1 1 3 to C - toU diera were engaged. The-fbt r-i ti Serenth'Ward. and wai between clrrei c.ii-rena and white soldiers icth csirj n . ' -: re. T7 James C- .iher 1, n t ci i: .1 ''a' . . - 3 h-v: employ of ' w Cx, ; fcturtrs,,at C-Ullcc:-?, 1-i;.' fitji trra'c t, lis tz.tlztrfi ;